When I was a kid we made a ton of these by placing them on train tracks and letting them get run over. How smashed depended on the size and weight of the train.
<< <i>When I was a kid we made a ton of these by placing them on train tracks and letting them get run over. How smashed depended on the size and weight of the train. >>
Me too, but I still am a kid.
Scott Hopkins -YN Currently Collecting & Researching Colonial World Coins, Especially Spanish Coins, With a Great Interest in WWII Militaria.
That coin was NOT ran over by a train. I'm not sure, but I think it was torched. I recently found one like that in a roll of Nickles. I'll try to attach a scan of mine. It's a 1992 P.
I dont think it was run over...That would have to be a small train...most lose thier details when run over too. I bet it was just hit on a nickel planchet..and got really beat up..prob. altered.
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<< <i>When I was a kid we made a ton of these by placing them on train tracks and letting them get run over. How smashed depended on the size and weight of the train. >>
Me too, but I still am a kid.
-YN Currently Collecting & Researching Colonial World Coins, Especially Spanish Coins, With a Great Interest in WWII Militaria.
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